Gold News

Gold Volatility 2009

Expect volatility in gold and all investment markets during 2009...

ALREADY THIS YEAR we are experiencing trend-threatening moves in various markets, writes Julian Phillips of the GoldForecaster.com, including gold vs. the US Dollar.

Should we believe that the markets are directionless? Can we rely on the charts to give us direction? What of the fundamentals of markets are they reliable guides?

Most important of all, are investors capable of responding to the directions given by fundamental and technical indicators?

These may not be as ridiculous a set of questions as they would have seemed a couple of years ago. Indeed, they now need to be considered carefully.

What we do expect in these initial days of 2009 is a search for a clear direction by market participants. They have to decide whether we are set for deflation or whether this will trend – of lower demand and lower prices – will reverse in response to the massive monetary stimuli coming from central banks and governments worldwide.

Ben Bernanke & Co. have made it more than clear that they "will do whatever it takes" to halt deflation and turn economies back to growth. We accept that this will happen, with the risk of all-out inflation to follow now clear and present. Consequently we face a strong 2009 direction, preceded only by heart-stopping volatility in all markets.

After the current market indecision has given away to an acceptance of our inflationary future, expect to hear the popping sound of the bond market bubble bursting, while currency market volatility reaches new highs. The rush into hard assets that will follow, as cash appears to lose its crown, will be a sight to behold. But cash, in the form of gold, will be one of the most popular homes for paper cash. Because you just can't inflate gold. And that attraction comes apart from the appeal of gold having no counterparty.

Overlaying this 'big picture' is volatility; shocking, persistent, unrestrained volatility. How does an investor cope? Last year we experienced "investor meltdown" which took the certainty out of all markets. So now we face a relatively simple choice:

  • We can refuse to invest, but that is more than a defeat; or
  • We can brace up and tackle the most difficult investment scene we have likely experienced in our investing lives.

In short, investors have to gather themselves together and set a policy they can hold to in the storms that lie ahead.

We have to be decisive on the back of a clear, workable set of conclusions, garnered from careful research. Once complete, we have to set our resolve as solidly as a sailor does at the wheel of a ship plowing through rough, stormy seas.

Here are a few of the steps we must consider:

  1. Is the world going to experience deflation from here onwards? Or, do we believe that deflation will be defeated by inflation? This conclusion is the foundation of our investment policy for 2009-'10. Whatever our course on this is, will take us to success or failure.
  2. In deflation, cash is king and asset values decline. However, this leaves a twilight zone for Gold Bullion, which in deflation is a haven from uncertainty and is a form of cash during extreme times. Its performance in the recent months has testified to this, as it dropped back somewhat but nowhere nearly as much as equities or commodities. Indeed, in currencies that experienced weakness against the US Dollar, gold has hardly fallen at all and in some – including the Euro and British Pound – it has risen soundly to new record highs.
  3. In inflation asset values rise and cash value declines taking the value of savings with it. Debt loses its sting and the velocity of money accelerates as people run from cash into assets as fast as they can. Again, gold has to be separated from paper cash as it sits in its twilight zone again, as an asset that is unprintable, has no counterparty, while remaining a form of cash? As we watched the consumer bubble rise and house prices seemingly sailing up unstoppably, Gold Investment rose as if to warn of the coming credit crunch. It thus served as an excellent haven from the unreality of the seemingly endless rosy future that house prices had discounted.

These three points show us that our investment decisions need not be one or the other, but that desirable place of both, taking us to a safe place. How much better the helm feels when one can be sure of this direction. How much firmer our grip on our investments when we be certain of preserving and increasing real wealth this way?

But the storm we sail through could be the worst known to modern markets, possibly making us easily distracted, uncertain and capricious, losing our grip on the rudder. That brings us back to ourselves and our ability to hold the course we set? One of the best ways to do this is to ensure that any change of direction should be as well researched and meet our first high standards as our initial course was. Failure to meet those standards should mean a rejection of alternatives and retention of the first course set.

We will inevitably find that our emotions pull us this way and that. The best way to tackle such emotional battering is to decide how we are going to handle it in the first place. In the calm days when we set our course we decide what we will do in the face of uncertainty and set standards for how we will allow these to affect our initial decisions. Thus we also reduce the likelihood of those emotions proving overwhelming.

The clearest mistake that led to investor meltdown was the failure to take into account the damage that could be done if markets fell unexpectedly. Had these been factored in, leveraging would have been either limited or unwound at the first sign of market meltdown. Indeed, we doubt that there is an investment manager out there that has not revisited the policy of leverage and time limits.

This has not been simply a matter of quantifying expected cash flow from investments, if capital values drop, but of setting strict criteria for leveraging and setting time period for investments. We don't mean limiting the period investments will be held for but removing any time restraints. For instance how many unsuccessful investors were wiped out by limiting the time there investments could perform in? How many were wiped out by having to sell when prices dropped?

For those with no leverage and capable of riding the storm to its conclusion, those losses can be lived through until they turn to profits in times that lie ahead when global stimulation has turned markets around if the market prospects warrant such a course? Those unable to hold during the storm simply become its victims? Such flexibility reduces risk!

When we set our minds to these values in the volatile days ahead for Gold in 2009 and 2010, we can be solid and clear on the way forward. We reduce risks by doing so and we believe we will see outstanding profits that can be retained. But we must have a strong resolve and a tough attitude to battle the massive waves of volatility we see before us.

JULIAN PHILLIPS – one half of the highly respected team at GoldForecaster.com – began his career in the financial markets back in 1970, when he left the British Army after serving as an Officer in the Light Infantry in Malaya, Mauritius, and Belfast.

First he worked in Timber Management and then joined the London Stock Exchange, qualifying as a member and specializing from the beginning in currencies, gold and the "Dollar Premium". On moving to South Africa, Julian was appointed a macro-economist for the Electricity Supply Commission – guiding currency decisions on the multi-billion foreign Loan Portfolio – before joining Chase Manhattan and the UK Merchant Bank, Hill Samuel, in Johannesburg.

There he specialized in gold, before moving to Capetown, where he established the Fund Management department of the Board of Executors. Julian returned to the "Gold World" over two years ago, contributing his exceptional experience and insights to Global Watch: The Gold Forecaster.

Legal Notice/Disclaimer: This document is not and should not be construed as an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to purchase or subscribe for any investment. Gold Forecaster/Julian D.W. Phillips have based this document on information obtained from sources they believe to be reliable but which it has not independently verified; they make no guarantee, representation or warranty and accepts no responsibility or liability as to its accuracy or completeness. Expressions of opinion are those of Gold Forecaster/Julian D.W. Phillips only and are subject to change without notice. They assume no warranty, liability or guarantee for the current relevance, correctness or completeness of any information provided within this report and will not be held liable for the consequence of reliance upon any opinion or statement contained herein or any omission. Furthermore, they assume no liability for any direct or indirect loss or damage or, in particular, for lost profit, which you may incur as a result of the use and existence of the information, provided within this report.

See full archive of Julian Phillips.

Please Note: All articles published here are to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it. Please review our Terms & Conditions for accessing Gold News.

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